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Single Cycle Processor Design

Single Cycle Processor Design. ICS 233 Computer Architecture and Assembly Language Dr. Aiman El-Maleh College of Computer Sciences and Engineering King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals [Adapted from slides of Dr. M. Mudawar, ICS 233, KFUPM]. Outline.

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Single Cycle Processor Design

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  1. Single Cycle Processor Design ICS 233 Computer Architecture and Assembly Language Dr. Aiman El-Maleh College of Computer Sciences and Engineering King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals [Adapted from slides of Dr. M. Mudawar, ICS 233, KFUPM]

  2. Outline • Designing a Processor: Step-by-Step • Datapath Components and Clocking • Assembling an Adequate Datapath • Controlling the Execution of Instructions • The Main Controller and ALU Controller • Drawback of the single-cycle processor design

  3. I-Count CPI Cycle The Performance Perspective • Recall, performance is determined by: • Instruction count • Clock cycles per instruction (CPI) • Clock cycle time • Processor design will affect • Clock cycles per instruction • Clock cycle time • Single cycle datapath and control design: • Advantage: One clock cycle per instruction • Disadvantage: long cycle time

  4. Designing a Processor: Step-by-Step • Analyze instruction set => datapath requirements • The meaning of each instruction is given by the register transfers • Datapath must include storage elements for ISA registers • Datapath must support each register transfer • Select datapath components and clocking methodology • Assemble datapath meeting the requirements • Analyze implementation of each instruction • Determine the setting of control signals for register transfer • Assemble the control logic

  5. Op6 Rs5 Rt5 Rd5 sa5 funct6 Op6 Rs5 Rt5 immediate16 Op6 immediate26 Review of MIPS Instruction Formats • All instructions are 32-bit wide • Three instruction formats: R-type, I-type, and J-type • Op6: 6-bit opcode of the instruction • Rs5, Rt5, Rd5: 5-bit source and destination register numbers • sa5: 5-bit shift amount used by shift instructions • funct6: 6-bit function field for R-type instructions • immediate16: 16-bit immediate value or address offset • immediate26: 26-bit target address of the jump instruction

  6. MIPS Subset of Instructions • Only a subset of the MIPS instructions are considered • ALU instructions (R-type): add, sub, and, or, xor, slt • Immediate instructions (I-type): addi, slti, andi, ori, xori • Load and Store (I-type): lw, sw • Branch (I-type): beq, bne • Jump (J-type): j • This subset does not include all the integer instructions • But sufficient to illustrate design of datapath and control • Concepts used to implement the MIPS subset are used to construct a broad spectrum of computers

  7. Details of the MIPS Subset

  8. Register Transfer Level (RTL) • RTL is a description of data flow between registers • RTL gives a meaning to the instructions • All instructions are fetched from memory at address PC Instruction RTL Description ADD Reg(Rd) ← Reg(Rs) + Reg(Rt); PC ← PC + 4 SUB Reg(Rd) ← Reg(Rs) – Reg(Rt); PC ← PC + 4 ORI Reg(Rt) ← Reg(Rs) | zero_ext(Im16); PC ← PC + 4 LW Reg(Rt) ← MEM[Reg(Rs) + sign_ext(Im16)]; PC ← PC + 4 SW MEM[Reg(Rs) + sign_ext(Im16)] ← Reg(Rt); PC ← PC + 4 BEQ if (Reg(Rs) == Reg(Rt)) PC ← PC + 4 + 4 × sign_extend(Im16) else PC ← PC + 4

  9. Instructions are Executed in Steps • R-typeFetch instruction: Instruction ← MEM[PC] Fetch operands: data1 ← Reg(Rs), data2 ← Reg(Rt) Execute operation: ALU_result ← func(data1, data2) Write ALU result: Reg(Rd) ← ALU_result Next PC address: PC ← PC + 4 • I-type Fetch instruction: Instruction ← MEM[PC] Fetch operands: data1 ← Reg(Rs), data2 ← Extend(imm16) Execute operation: ALU_result ← op(data1, data2) Write ALU result: Reg(Rt) ← ALU_result Next PC address: PC ← PC + 4 • BEQ Fetch instruction: Instruction ← MEM[PC] Fetch operands: data1 ← Reg(Rs), data2 ← Reg(Rt) Equality: zero ← subtract(data1, data2) Branch: if (zero) PC ← PC + 4 + 4×sign_ext(imm16) else PC ← PC + 4

  10. concatenation Instruction Execution – cont’d • LWFetch instruction: Instruction ← MEM[PC] Fetch base register: base ← Reg(Rs) Calculate address: address ← base + sign_extend(imm16) Read memory: data ← MEM[address] Write register Rt: Reg(Rt) ← data Next PC address: PC ← PC + 4 • SW Fetch instruction: Instruction ← MEM[PC] Fetch registers: base ← Reg(Rs), data ← Reg(Rt) Calculate address: address ← base + sign_extend(imm16) Write memory: MEM[address] ← data Next PC address: PC ← PC + 4 • Jump Fetch instruction: Instruction ← MEM[PC] Target PC address: target ← PC[31:28] , Imm26 , ‘00’ Jump: PC ← target

  11. Requirements of the Instruction Set • Memory • Instruction memory where instructions are stored • Data memory where data is stored • Registers • 32 × 32-bit general purpose registers, R0 is always zero • Read source register Rs • Read source register Rt • Write destination register Rt or Rd • Program counter PC register and Adder to increment PC • Sign and Zero extender for immediate constant • ALU for executing instructions

  12. Next . . . • Designing a Processor: Step-by-Step • Datapath Components and Clocking • Assembling an Adequate Datapath • Controlling the Execution of Instructions • The Main Controller and ALU Controller • Drawback of the single-cycle processor design

  13. 32 zero A L U m u x 32 0 ALU result 16 32 Extend overflow 32 1 ALU control ExtOp select 32 Instruction 32 32 PC 32 Address Instruction Memory Data Memory 32 Address 32 Data_out 32 Data_in MemRead MemWrite Components of the Datapath • Combinational Elements • ALU, Adder • Immediate extender • Multiplexers • Storage Elements • Instruction memory • Data memory • PC register • Register file • Clocking methodology • Timing of reads and writes Registers 5 32 BusA RA 5 32 RB BusB 5 RW BusW Clock 32 RegWrite

  14. Data_In n bits Register Write Enable Clock Data_Out n bits Register Element • Register • Similar to the D-type Flip-Flop • n-bit input and output • Write Enable: • Enable / disable writing of register • Negated (0): Data_Out will not change • Asserted (1): Data_Out will become Data_In after clock edge • Edge triggered Clocking • Register output is modified at clock edge

  15. Register File 5 32 BusA RA 5 RB 32 5 BusB RW Clock BusW 32 RegWrite MIPS Register File RW RA RB • Register File consists of 32 × 32-bit registers • BusA and BusB: 32-bit output busses for reading 2 registers • BusW: 32-bit input bus for writing a register when RegWrite is 1 • Two registers read and one written in a cycle • Registers are selected by: • RA selects register to be read on BusA • RB selects register to be read on BusB • RW selects the register to be written • Clock input • The clock input is usedONLY during write operation • During read, register file behaves as a combinational logic block • RA or RB valid => BusA or BusB valid after access time

  16. Enable Data_in Data_out Data_0 Output Data_1 Select Tri-State Buffers • Allow multiple sources to drive a single bus • Two Inputs: • Data signal (data_in) • Output enable • One Output (data_out): • If (Enable) Data_out = Data_in else Data_out = High Impedance state (output is disconnected) • Tri-state buffers can be used to build multiplexors

  17. RB RA 5 5 Decoder Decoder Details of the Register File "0" "0" 32 Tri-state buffer 32 R1 R0 is not used 32 32 RW R2 . . . Decoder 5 . . . 32 BusA 32 32 BusW 32 R31 32 Clock RegWrite BusB

  18. 32 32 32 32 32 2 2 A d d e r ADD = 0 SUB = 1 Arithmetic Operation Building a Multifunction ALU None = 00 SLL = 01 SRL = 10 SRA = 11 SLT: ALU does a SUB and check the sign and overflow Shift Operation Shifter Shift Amount lsb 5 c0 0 ALU Result A sign  1 2 B 3 2 overflow zero ALU Selection Logic Unit 0 1 Shift = 00 SLT = 01 Arith = 10 Logic = 11 2 AND = 00 OR = 01 NOR = 10 XOR = 11 Logical Operation 3

  19. Data Memory 32 32 Data_out Address 32 Data_in 32 32 Clock Address Instruction Instruction Memory MemRead MemWrite Instruction and Data Memories • Instruction memory needs only provide read access • Because datapath does not write instructions • Behaves as combinational logic for read • Address selects Instruction after access time • Data Memory is used for load and store • MemRead: enables output on Data_out • Address selects the word to put on Data_out • MemWrite: enables writing of Data_in • Address selects the memory word to be written • The Clock synchronizes the write operation • Separate instruction and data memories • Later, we will replace them with caches

  20. Combinational logic Register 2 Register 1 clock rising edge falling edge Clocking Methodology • Clocks are needed in a sequential logic to decide when a state element (register) should be updated • To ensure correctness, a clocking methodology defines when data can be written and read • We assume edge-triggered clocking • All state changes occur on the sameclock edge • Data must be valid and stable before arrival of clock edge • Edge-triggered clocking allows a register to be read and written during same clock cycle

  21. Combinational logic Register 1 Register 2 clock Tclk-q Tmax_comb Ts Th Determining the Clock Cycle • With edge-triggered clocking, the clock cycle must be long enough to accommodate the path from one register through the combinational logic to another register • Tclk-q : clock to output delay through register • Tmax_comb : longest delay through combinational logic • Ts : setup time that input to a register must be stable before arrival of clock edge • Th: hold time that input to a register must hold after arrival of clock edge • Hold time (Th) is normally satisfied since Tclk-q > Th writing edge Tcycle ≥ Tclk-q + Tmax_comb + Ts

  22. Clock Skew • Clock skew arises because the clock signal uses different paths with slightly different delays to reach state elements • Clock skew is the difference in absolute time between when two storage elements see a clock edge • With a clock skew, the clock cycle time is increased • Clock skew is reduced by balancing the clock delays Tcycle ≥ Tclk-q + Tmax_combinational + Tsetup+ Tskew

  23. Next . . . • Designing a Processor: Step-by-Step • Datapath Components and Clocking • Assembling an Adequate Datapath • Controlling the Execution of Instructions • The Main Controller and ALU Controller • Drawback of the single-cycle processor design

  24. next PC next PC 4 Improved Datapath A d d +1 32 32 30 30 32 32 00 Instruction Instruction 32 32 Address Address PC PC Instruction Memory Instruction Memory Instruction Fetching Datapath • We can now assemble the datapath from its components • For instruction fetching, we need … • Program Counter (PC) register • Instruction Memory • Adder for incrementing PC Improved datapath increments upper 30 bits of PC by 1 The least significant 2 bits of the PC are ‘00’ since PC is a multiple of 4 00 Datapath does not handle branch or jump instructions

  25. RegWrite ALUCtrl +1 30 Instruction Memory Registers 32 Rs 5 A L U 30 BusA RA 32 32 Instruction Rt 5 RB 32 Address BusB 32 Rd 5 RW ALU result BusW Op6 Rs5 Rt5 Rd5 sa5 funct6 00 PC Datapath for R-type Instructions • Control signals • ALUCtrl is derived from the funct field because Op = 0 for R-type • RegWrite is used to enable the writing of the ALU result RA & RB come from the instruction’s Rs & Rt fields ALU inputs come from BusA & BusB RW comes from the Rd field ALU result is connected to BusW

  26. RegWrite ALUCtrl +1 30 Instruction Memory Registers 32 Rs 5 A L U 30 BusA RA 32 32 Instruction 5 RB 32 32 Address BusB 32 Rt 5 RW ALU result BusW Extender ExtOp Imm16 00 Op6 Rs5 Rt5 immediate16 PC Datapath for I-type ALU Instructions • Control signals • ALUCtrl is derived from the Op field • RegWrite is used to enable the writing of the ALU result • ExtOp is used to control the extension of the 16-bit immediate RW now comes from Rt, instead of Rd Second ALU input comes from the extended immediate RB and BusB are not used

  27. RegWrite +1 ALUCtrl 30 Instruction Memory Registers 32 Rs 5 A L U 30 BusA RA 32 32 Instruction Rt 32 5 RB 32 BusB Address m u x m u x 0 0 RW BusW Rd 1 1 ExtOp 32 ALUSrc 5 RegDst ALU result Extender Imm16 00 PC Combining R-type & I-type Datapaths Another mux selects 2nd ALU input as either source register Rt data on BusB or the extended immediate A mux selects RW as either Rt or Rd • Control signals • ALUCtrl is derived from either the Op or the funct field • RegWrite enables the writing of the ALU result • ExtOp controls the extension of the 16-bit immediate • RegDst selects the register destination as either Rt or Rd • ALUSrc selects the 2nd ALU source as BusB or extended immediate

  28. RegWrite = 1 +1 ALUCtrl 30 Instruction Memory Registers 32 Rs 5 A L U 30 BusA RA 32 32 Instruction Rt 32 5 RB 32 BusB Address m u x m u x m u x m u x 0 0 0 0 RW BusW Rd ExtOp 32 ALUSrc = 0 5 1 1 1 1 RegDst = 1 ALU result Extender Imm16 RegWrite = 1 +1 ALUCtrl 30 Instruction Memory Registers 32 Rs 5 A L U 30 BusA RA 32 32 Instruction Rt 32 5 RB 32 00 00 BusB Address RW BusW PC PC Rd ExtOp 32 ALUSrc = 1 5 RegDst = 0 ALU result Extender Imm16 Controlling ALU Instructions For R-type ALU instructions, RegDst is ‘1’ to select Rd on RW and ALUSrc is ‘0’ to select BusB as second ALU input. The active part of datapath is shown in green For I-type ALU instructions, RegDst is ‘0’ to select Rt on RW and ALUSrc is ‘1’ to select Extended immediate as second ALU input. The active part of datapath is shown in green

  29. Upper 16 bits . . . ExtOp Imm16 Lower 16 bits . . . Details of the Extender • Two types of extensions • Zero-extension for unsigned constants • Sign-extension for signed constants • Control signal ExtOp indicates type of extension • Extender Implementation: wiring and one AND gate ExtOp = 0  Upper16 = 0 ExtOp = 1  Upper16 = sign bit

  30. ExtOp ALUCtrl MemRead MemWrite 32 Imm16 ALUSrc MemtoReg ALU result +1 30 Instruction Memory Registers 32 Rs 5 Data Memory m u x m u x m u x 0 0 0 BusA RA A L U 30 32 Instruction Rt 5 Address RB 1 1 1 32 BusB Data_out Address Data_in Extender RW BusW Rd 32 32 5 RegDst RegWrite 32 32 00 PC Adding Data Memory to Datapath • A data memory is added for load and store instructions ALU calculates data memory address A 3rd mux selects data on BusW as either ALU result or memory data_out • Additional Control signals • MemRead for load instructions • MemWrite for store instructions • MemtoReg selects data on BusW as ALU result or Memory Data_out BusB is connected to Data_in of Data Memory for store instructions

  31. ExtOp = sign ALUCtrl = ADD MemRead = 1 MemWrite = 0 ALUSrc = 1 MemtoReg = 1 m u x m u x m u x 0 0 0 1 1 1 32 32 32 RegDst = 0 RegWrite = 1 32 00 PC Controlling the Execution of Load ExtOp = ‘sign’ to sign-extend Immmediate16 to 32 bits 32 Imm16 Extender ALU result +1 30 Instruction Memory Registers 32 Rs 5 Data Memory BusA RA A L U 30 32 Instruction Rt 5 Address RB 32 BusB Data_out Address Data_in RW BusW Rd 5 RegDst = ‘0’ selects Rt as destination register MemRead = ‘1’ to read data memory ALUSrc = ‘1’ selects extended immediate as second ALU input MemtoReg = ‘1’ places the data read from memory on BusW ALUCtrl = ‘ADD’ to calculate data memory address as Reg(Rs) + sign-extend(Imm16) RegWrite = ‘1’ to write the memory data on BusW to register Rt

  32. ExtOp = sign ALUCtrl = ADD MemRead = 0 MemWrite = 1 ALUSrc = 1 MemtoReg = x m u x m u x m u x 0 0 0 1 1 1 32 32 32 RegDst = x RegWrite = 0 32 00 PC Controlling the Execution of Store ExtOp = ‘sign’ to sign-extend Immmediate16 to 32 bits 32 Imm16 Extender ALU result +1 30 Instruction Memory Registers 32 Rs 5 Data Memory BusA RA A L U 30 32 Instruction Rt 5 Address RB 32 BusB Data_out Address Data_in RW BusW Rd 5 RegDst = ‘x’ because no destination register MemWrite = ‘1’ to write data memory ALUSrc = ‘1’ to select the extended immediate as second ALU input MemtoReg = ‘x’ because we don’t care what data is placed on BusW ALUCtrl = ‘ADD’ to calculate data memory address as Reg(Rs) + sign-extend(Imm16) RegWrite = ‘0’ because no register is written by the store instruction

  33. 30 30 30 PCSrc zero m u x m u x m u x m u x 0 0 0 0 30 MemRead MemWrite 1 1 1 1 Ext 32 32 J, Beq, Bne 00 PC Adding Jump and Branch to Datapath Jump or Branch Target Address • Additional Control Signals • J, Beq, Bne for jump and branch instructions • Zero condition of the ALU is examined • PCSrc = 1 for Jump & taken Branch Next PC Imm26 MemtoReg ALU result +1 Imm16 Instruction Memory Registers Rs 5 Data Memory BusA RA A L U 32 Instruction Rt 5 Address RB BusB Data_out Address Data_in RW BusW Rd 5 RegDst RegWrite ALUSrc ALUCtrl Next PC computes jump or branch target instruction address For Branch, ALU does a subtraction

  34. A D D 30 SE 0 m u x 1 Details of Next PC Imm16 is sign-extended to 30 bits Jump target address: upper 4 bits of PC are concatenated with Imm26 PCSrc = J + (Beq .Zero) + (Bne .Zero) Branch or Jump Target Address PCSrc 30 Inc PC Sign-Extension: Most-significant bit is replicated 30 30 Beq Imm16 Bne msb 4 Imm26 26 J Zero

  35. 30 30 30 MemtoReg = x PCSrc = 1 zero Registers BusA RA m u x m u x m u x m u x 0 0 0 0 A L U 30 MemRead = 0 MemWrite = 0 RB 1 1 1 1 BusB RW BusW Ext 32 32 RegDst = x RegWrite = 0 ExtOp = x ALUSrc = x ALUCtrl = x J = 1 00 PC Controlling the Execution of Jump Jump Target Address Next PC Imm26 ALU result +1 Imm16 Instruction Memory Rs 5 Data Memory 32 Instruction Rt 5 Address Data_out Address Data_in Rd 5 J = 1 selects Imm26 as jump target address Upper 4 bits are from the incremented PC MemRead, MemWrite & RegWrite are 0 We don’t care about RegDst, ExtOp, ALUSrc, ALUCtrl, and MemtoReg PCSrc = 1 to select jump target address

  36. 30 30 30 MemtoReg = x PCSrc = 1 zero Registers BusA RA m u x m u x m u x m u x 0 0 0 0 A L U 30 MemRead = 0 MemWrite = 0 RB 1 1 1 1 BusB RW BusW Ext 32 32 RegDst = x RegWrite = 0 Beq = 1 Bne = 1 ExtOp = x ALUSrc = 0 ALUCtrl = SUB 00 PC Controlling the Execution of Branch Branch Target Address Next PC Imm26 ALU result +1 Imm16 Instruction Memory Rs 5 Data Memory 32 Instruction Rt 5 Address Data_out Address Data_in Rd 5 Either Beq or Bne =1 Next PC outputs branch target address ALUSrc = ‘0’ (2nd ALU input is BusB) ALUCtrl = ‘SUB’ produces zero flag Next PC logic determines PCSrc according to zero flag MemRead = MemWrite = RegWrite = 0 RegDst = ExtOp = MemtoReg = x

  37. Next . . . • Designing a Processor: Step-by-Step • Datapath Components and Clocking • Assembling an Adequate Datapath • Controlling the Execution of Instructions • The Main Controller and ALU Controller • Drawback of the single-cycle processor design

  38. Datapath Instruction Memory A L U 32 Instruction Address MemRead MemtoReg MemWrite RegDst RegWrite ExtOp ALUSrc Beq Bne J funct6 Op6 ALUCtrl ALUOp Main Control ALU Control Main Control and ALU Control Input: • 6-bit opcode field from instruction Output: • 10 control signals for datapath • ALUOp for ALU Control Input: • 6-bit function field from instruction • ALUOp from main control Output: • ALUCtrl signal for ALU

  39. Jump or Branch Target Address 30 Next PC J, Beq, Bne 30 30 Imm26 ALU result +1 PCSrc Imm16 zero Instruction Memory Registers Rs 5 Data Memory BusA RA m u x m u x m u x m u x 0 0 0 0 A L U 32 Instruction Rt 5 Address 30 RB 1 1 1 1 BusB Data_out Address Data_in RW BusW Ext Rd 32 5 32 RegDst RegWrite ExtOp ALUSrc ALUCtrl func Main Control Op MemRead 00 MemWrite MemtoReg PC ALUOp ALU Ctrl Single-Cycle Datapath + Control

  40. Main Control Signals

  41. Main Control Signal Values • X is a don’t care (can be 0 or 1), used to minimize logic

  42. Op6 Decoder slti R-type addi andi ori xori lw sw Logic Equations ALUop RegDst RegWrite ExtOp ALUSrc MemRead MemWrite MemtoReg Bne J Beq Logic Equations for Control Signals RegDst <= R-type RegWrite <= (sw + beq + bne + j) ExtOp <= (andi + ori + xori) ALUSrc <= (R-type + beq + bne) MemRead <= lw MemWrite <= sw MemtoReg <= lw

  43. The 4-bit encoding for ALUctrl is chosen here to be equal to the last 4 bits of the function field ALU Control Truth Table Other binary encodings are also possible. The idea is to choose a binary encoding that will minimize the logic for ALU Control

  44. Next . . . • Designing a Processor: Step-by-Step • Datapath Components and Clocking • Assembling an Adequate Datapath • Controlling the Execution of Instructions • The Main Controller and ALU Controller • Drawback of the single-cycle processor design

  45. Drawbacks of Single Cycle Processor • Long cycle time • All instructions take as much time as the slowest • Alternative Solution: Multicycle implementation • Break down instruction execution into multiple cycles ALU Instruction Fetch Reg Read ALU Reg Write longest delay Load Instruction Fetch Reg Read ALU Reg Write Memory Read Store Instruction Fetch Reg Read ALU Memory Write Branch Instruction Fetch Reg Read ALU Jump Instruction Fetch Decode

  46. Multicycle Implementation • Break instruction execution into five steps • Instruction fetch • Instruction decode and register read • Execution, memory address calculation, or branch completion • Memory access or ALU instruction completion • Load instruction completion • One step = One clock cycle (clock cycle is reduced) • First 2 steps are the same for all instructions

  47. Performance Example • Assume the following operation times for components: • Instruction and data memories: 200 ps • ALU and adders: 180 ps • Decode and Register file access (read or write): 150 ps • Ignore the delays in PC, mux, extender, and wires • Which of the following would be faster and by how much? • Single-cycle implementation for all instructions • Multicycle implementation optimized for every class of instructions • Assume the following instruction mix: • 40% ALU, 20% Loads, 10% stores, 20% branches, & 10% jumps

  48. Solution decode and update PC • For fixed single-cycle implementation: • Clock cycle = • For multi-cycle implementation: • Clock cycle = • Average CPI = • Speedup = 880 ps determined by longest delay (load instruction) max (200, 150, 180) = 200 ps (maximum delay at any step) 0.4×4 + 0.2×5 + 0.1×4+ 0.2×3 + 0.1×2 = 3.8 880 ps / (3.8 × 200 ps) = 880 / 760 = 1.16

  49. Clk Clk-to-q Old PC New PC Instruction Memory Access Time Old Instruction New Instruction = (Op, Rs, Rt, Rd, Funct, Imm16, Imm26) Delay Through Control Logic Old Control Signal Values New Control Signal Values (ExtOp, ALUSrc, ALUOp, …) Register File Access Time Old BusA Value New BusA Value = Register(Rs) Delay Through Extender and ALU Mux Old Second ALU Input New Second ALU Input = sign-extend(Imm16) ALU Delay New ALU Result = Address Old ALU Result Data Memory Access Time Old Data Memory Output Value New Value Mux delay + Setup time + Clock skew Write Occurs Worst Case Timing (Load Instruction) Clock Cycle

  50. Worst Case Timing – Cont'd • Long cycle time: must be long enough for Load operation PC’s Clk-to-Q + Instruction Memory’s Access Time + Maximum of ( Register File’s Access Time, Delay through control logic + extender + ALU mux) + ALU to Perform a 32-bit Add + Data Memory Access Time + Delay through MemtoReg Mux + Setup Time for Register File Write + Clock Skew • Cycle time is longer than needed for other instructions • Therefore, single cycle processor design is not used in practice

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